lightline-ale
ultisnips
lightline-ale | ultisnips | |
---|---|---|
1 | 65 | |
251 | 7,604 | |
0.8% | 0.4% | |
10.0 | 4.9 | |
over 3 years ago | about 2 months ago | |
Vim Script | Python | |
ISC License | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
lightline-ale
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Help me set up vim for linting and a file tree please and some other stuff
The panel at the bottom is your status line. There are several nice status line plugins like airline, powerline, lightline (what I use). By default it shows basic details like file name, git branch, file type, line and column number, etc. To enable syntax errors and warnings on status line (and all over the file) I use ALE and lightline-ale
ultisnips
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C++ Template Macroprogramming versus Lisp Macros
Let’s say, you’re writing a web application. In most programming language you’d be using libraries or rely on a framework. With Lisp macros, you can program the archetype of a web application. And then use a simpler language to describe you application. Think of it as programmable snippets. Something like Ultisnips [0], but inherent to the language.
[0]: https://github.com/SirVer/ultisnips
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LaTeX and Neovim for technical note-taking
I always like people's LaTeX-based note taking setups. I'm a mathematician, so I write a lot of LaTeX too. (And I use vim, so I really like vim+Latex workflows).
It's interesting that this post (or rather, the later post that discusses this) talks about the advantages of UltiSnips. The well-known vim-LaTeX posts written by Gilles Castel (RIP) relied pivotally on UltiSnips.
It's not just that UltiSnips is a snippet engine. There are many of those (including LuaSnip, the other snippet engine mentioned in the OP series of articles). It's that UltiSnips can dispatch arbitrary expressions to short python code sections, and python has a great scientific library. For example, it's trivial to write a `sympy` snippet that will simplify or compute a given expression and write the output in latex for you.
But UltiSnips works *terribly* with neovim [1] [2]. Why? Because UltiSnips uses python, and neovim's python interface is 100x slower than vim's python interface. There are design decisions for this and I'm not trying to say that neovim is bad. I use both vim and neovim. But I use vim+UltiSnips+vimtex for writing LaTeX.
LuaSnip has interpolation too. I suppose it would be possible to write more code that calls from LuaSnip to a system like sympy (or other). But that's work. On the other hand, I think it takes a true power user to actually want or use the fancy interpolation functions.
[1]: https://github.com/SirVer/ultisnips/issues/974
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Looking for tutorials / Hello world projects to create Neovim plugins using Pynvim
I think in-the-wild examples like Ultisnips deoplete semshi (although they are advanced and somewhat complex) would also be good examples to learn how one can use python for writing plugins.
- UltiSnips – Snippet Solution for Vim
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lsp-zero v2.x is now available
I didn't know lsp-zero, but this integration seems just for me except for that I am using UltiSnips instead of luasnip. Just curious how difficult do you think it is to add UltiSnips integration along with cmp-nvim-ultisnips?
- Minimalistic neovim/vim with batteries included ?
- How to solve this? (Ultisnippets plugin)
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Awkwardness when typing in '\n' or '\t' or (...) [...] etc. -- (Have others noticed this too?) -- (is there a better way?)
If you use UltiSnips, you can just do this:
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Vim + LaTeX
Snipets or code completion can be done in a number of different ways, and how that is configured will depend on what method you use. In the blog he uses the vim plugin ultisnips. You'll find details on configuration for that in that link.
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Python36.dll not found
Heyo, I've been trying to get UltiSnips and YouCompleteMe to work, however, I've ran into a bit of a problem. The python36.dll library does not seem to exist for UltiSnips, and YouCompleteMe cannot locate python at all (screenshots at bottom).
What are some alternatives?
awesome-vim - The Vim plugin shortlist
LuaSnip - Snippet Engine for Neovim written in Lua.
emmet-vim - emmet for vim: http://emmet.io/
vim-vsnip - Snippet plugin for vim/nvim that supports LSP/VSCode's snippet format.
ale - Check syntax in Vim/Neovim asynchronously and fix files, with Language Server Protocol (LSP) support
friendly-snippets - Set of preconfigured snippets for different languages.